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We've launched a migrant rescue ship to resist the racist right in Italy

We've launched a migrant rescue ship to resist the racist right in Italy

Opinion Refugees Weâve launched a migrant rescue ship to resist the racist right in Italy This mission is not only about providing humanitarian aid but protesting against the toxic politics of Italy, Europe and the US The Mare Jonio. âThe project takes place against the backdrop of an Italian government that has sought repeatedly to block and even criminalise humanitarian assistance.â Photograph: Ruben Neugebauer

We are part of an activist project that launched the Mare Jonio, a rescue ship that is now motoring toward the âsearch and rescueâ zone off the coast of Libya. In contrast to rescue ships operated by humanitarian NGOs, which have been blocked in recent months by the Italian government, the Mare Jonio flies an Italian flag and is mainly operated by an Italian crew. It can thus not legally be refused entry to an Italian port.

We also created a platform, Operation Mediterranean, which coordinates the entire operation. It also supports our wider goals: to foster discussion and promote action to contest current migration policies and to challenge the aggressive atmosphere of racism. The platformâs website provides extensive information about participants, supporters, and funding.

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We joined this mission because of our desire not only to help provide humanitarian aid for those who risk death at sea but also to intervene in the toxic political atmosphere of Italy, Europe, and beyond. Faced with a seemingly interminable s tate of emergency in which governments enact racist and reactionary policies, often with the support of electoral majorities, we need to protest against them and resist them to protect the vulnerable, and defend past gains.

But too often people assume that we can do no more than that. For us, an audacious enterprise like launching this migrant rescue ship demonstrates that yes, we can. Rather than merely reacting to the daily outrages of the ruling parties or parrying the demonstrations of fascist groups, we can and must think big and act boldly outside of the established political structures in order to create a different, more just and more democratic society.

The Mare Jonio set off on the anniversary of the 2013 disaster in which nearly 400 migrants drowned off the Italian island of Lampedusa. In the years since that tragedy, Italian and European policies have, in fact, made the passage of migrants across the Mediterranean even more dangerous and lethal while obstru cting humanitarian aid efforts. As a result, migrants continue to die at sea in alarming numbers.

Italyâs anti-migrant campaigns, which this proje ct contests, run parallel in several respects to those in the United States. Just as European governments have made the Mediterranean crossing more difficult and hazardous for migrants, making the sea into a graveyard, so too the US Border Patrol has made migrant routes through the desert more perilous and deadlier. Similarly, the cruelty of the Trump administrationâs family separation policy finds echoes in the squalor of the migrant camps and barbarity of Italian and European methods to make the lives of migrants unbearable.

Keep in mind that these an ti-migrant campaigns coincide with rising racism on both sides of the Atlantic. Matteo Salvini, the Italian minister of the interior who has spearheaded these policies, declares them to be an essential part of his commitment always to put âItaly firstâ. When refusing to allow the rescued migrants to disembark in August, for instance, he echoed statements typical of Donald Trump: âfor me, Italians come first, then the rest of the worldâ â" and he put that sentiment into action with cruel policies.

And Italy, unfortunately, is not alone. Governments throughout Europe, pushed in many cases by growing rightwing political forces, enact various permutations of anti-migrant policies. President Trump may gain the most attention for his rhetoric and actions against migrants, but ruling European politicians are unfortunately his equal in this regard.

We know this project is hazardous, and we donât underestimate the difficulties ahead. In many respects we are swimming against the current. We are well aware that if the Mare Jonio rescues migrants and brings them to an Italian port, a confrontation with the Italian government is possible. The government could block the ship and perhaps even criminalise participants for aiding migrants. Legal scholars are part of the platform, and are at the ready to respond to such confrontations.

We are also swimming against the current, more importantly, in the sense that in Italy, as elsewhere in Europe and the US, there is a growing hegemony that is hostile to migrants and that, often in the name of security or the preservation of civilisational values, seeks to close borders, refuse asylum, and expel those who have already arrived. This fact only makes it more urgent, in our view, to act now with all the means at our disposal.

And we hope that the Mare Jonio can demonstrate that, even in times like these, we are not powerless but can accomplish audacious interventions aimed at real social transfo rmation. At the end of the day we may discover that the dominance of the right is much weaker than it seems â" and that it can be effectively challenged and overthrown.

â¢ Michael Hardt is a professor of literature and Italian studies at Duke University, North Carolina; Sandro Mezzadra is an associate professor of political theory at the University of Bologna